When Dad’s Stress Gets under Kid’s Skin—Impacts of Stress on Germline Cargo and Embryonic Development

Author:

Kretschmer Miriam12ORCID,Fischer Vincent12,Gapp Katharina12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Epigenetics and Neuroendocrinology, Department of Health Sciences and Technology, Institute for Neuroscience, ETH Zürich, 8057 Zürich, Switzerland

2. Neuroscience Center Zurich, ETH Zürich and University of Zürich, 8057 Zürich, Switzerland

Abstract

Multiple lines of evidence suggest that paternal psychological stress contributes to an increased prevalence of neuropsychiatric and metabolic diseases in the progeny. While altered paternal care certainly plays a role in such transmitted disease risk, molecular factors in the germline might additionally be at play in humans. This is supported by findings on changes to the molecular make up of germ cells and suggests an epigenetic component in transmission. Several rodent studies demonstrate the correlation between paternal stress induced changes in epigenetic modifications and offspring phenotypic alterations, yet some intriguing cases also start to show mechanistic links in between sperm and the early embryo. In this review, we summarise efforts to understand the mechanism of intergenerational transmission from sperm to the early embryo. In particular, we highlight how stress alters epigenetic modifications in sperm and discuss the potential for these modifications to propagate modified molecular trajectories in the early embryo to give rise to aberrant phenotypes in adult offspring.

Funder

SNF

SBFI-funded ERC starting grant

ETH Project Grant

Olga Mayenfisch foundation the Kurt

Senta Herrmann foundation

ZNZ-Ph.D. fellowship

Swiss State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

Reference266 articles.

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